Psalm 118:1-29 · Psalm 118
God Made My Day
Psalm 118:1-29
Sermon
by Carl B. Rife
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"God Made My Day" is one anonymous Christian's response to the infamous line of Clint Eastwood's Dirty Harry character who says,"Go ahead, make my day," as he holds a gun on a thug and dares him to make a move. The implication is that Harry Callahan's day would be made if he were given the opportunity by a false move by his antagonist to mete out his rough version of justice by wasting the guy, as the language in these movies goes.

Over against this cynical view of life is this affirmation on a bumper sticker that some people have placed on their cars, "God Made My Day." And what I would like us to do this morning is to try to understand this phrase and to see in what sense can we affirm that God made our day.

We can say that God made our day in the sense that God creates all days. That is a faith perspective and that faith perspective leads to a way of approaching life. If we really believe at the very core of our being that God is the creator and the Lord of all time, of all days, it would affect our attitude toward life, toward each day. The Psalmist exclaimed, "This is the day that the Lord has made, let us rejoice and be glad in it." I saw a poster sometime ago with a little boy sitting in a high chair with a bowl of spaghetti over his head and it said, "This is the day that the Lord has made, let us rejoice and be glad in it." You know there is a real message in that; we can rejoice even in those days when the kid puts spaghetti over his head.

One commentator said that "life is one damnned thing after another." That is not the view of the Psalmist at all. Each day, says the Psalmist, is a gift from God. Each day is an opportunity to rejoice, to appreciate the gift of life. Not long ago I attended a seminar for clergy and the leader got up in front of the group and said, "This is the day that the Lord has made, don't blow it." Could we wake up in the morning and say that? This is the day that the Lord has made, don't blow it. I like that very much. This is a day laden with opportunities, a day to live, to love, to serve, a day to create, a day to celebrate. Don't blow it. Granting that what I said is true, we still face the challenges of each day. There is another bumper sticker I did not dare to use in this series. It says something like "stuff happens!" It is crude and vulgar and cynical. It also speaks to a truth about life. The point is, that each day that we face is not a day ready made to bring us happiness. Stuff happens, terrible stuff, stuff that makes it hard to believe that this is the day that the Lord has made. The testimony of scripture and faith is that God will give us the strength to face the stuff, the challenges of each day.

I really never appreciated the story of the Israelites in the wilderness and their receiving manna from God: the fact that at the end of each day they could not store up manna for it would rot and they would have to wait again for the next day to receive new manna. As I was studying the Lord's Prayer, the person who was commenting on this prayer pointed out that the phrase "give us this day our daily bread" is connected with that experience of manna in the wilderness. The point being this, behind manna, behind daily bread is God's grace, God's strength. And God does not give it to us in abundance that we can store it up for the future. When we look at our lives, at what we are facing today and what we are facing tomorrow and down the line, we would like to know that we will be able to cope with whatever comes our way. What we receive is strength for the day, manna, daily bread.

And that underscores the promise, perhaps the most significant promise of scripture. I am aware of this promise because my pastor during my formative years would constantly say in every opportunity he had to share: "There is one promise that we can depend on and that is the promise that God made through Christthat his grace will be sufficient." He was constantly preaching about sufficient grace. The phrase comes from Paul who said that the Lord assured him in the midst of his affliction that "My grace is sufficient for you (2 Corinthians 12:9)." Now one of the things that I have experienced since I have heard that message is that sometimes it seems we get pretty close to the edge and sometimes it is a close call, but God's grace is stillsufficient. Like the old television program we need to approach life "OneDay At A Time." We need to face the challenges of each day with God's help and explore its opportunities. It is possible to move beyond merely surviving the day to thriving.

There is another dimension. Not only can we say that God made my day in the sense that God creates all days. Not only can we say that God made my day in the sense that God gives us the strength to meet the challenges of each day, but we also have to say that God made our day in the sense that God shows that the way to make our day is to help make somebody else's day. True joy and happiness come when we take our gaze off our own problems and redirect our attention and energies to others.

One reason our problems loom so large is that when we put our gaze on our problems they become magnified by our self-concern. One thing that the medical world is discovering is that through our attitudes and through what we do, we release all kinds of chemicals in our systems, some negative and some positive. And one way to insure our continued problems is to gaze inward. A kind of acid begins to eat away inside us when we do that. Literally, not just figuratively, an acid begins to eat away at our being.

A couple of weeks ago my son Stephen and I stumbled on to this whole experience of making somebody else's day that we did not expect. We had planned for the summer to take some small trips to go see all the minor league teams in the Orioles organization play so that some day we could say, "We've been there and saw that guy when he was down in Class A, Double A, Triple A." So we decided to go up to Frederick and we had some time before the game. We went to visit a fellow named Teddy who is in his 80s and who became a friend of mine when we lived in Frederick. Teddy came from Germany as a teenager, learned to be a chef and became the head chef at the Francis Scott Key Hotel in Frederick. At 80-some years old, he is bent over with arthritis and having lost his second wife a couple of years ago, he is a very lonely man. We stopped by to see him and were sharing with him that we were on our way to McCurdy Field to see the Frederick Keys play. I am absolutely convinced that it was some kind of inspiration from God because I never thought that he would do it. I said, "Teddy, would you like to go out and eat supper and then go to the game?" And Teddy brightened up and said, "Sure I'll go." We went out to eat and then we went to the game. At the game many people came up and talked to Teddy because practically everybody in Frederick knows Teddy.

The thing that Stephen and I both commented on almost simultaneously was that what really made our day was that somehow, even somewhat by accident, we had helped to make somebody else's day. And what a difference it made; it at least doubled our joy of going to the game. You see that what I am saying is God made life so that when we help to make somebody else's day it helps to make ours. It is so obviously clear, that I do not know why we get caught up in the dead-end of our own worlds, in our own problems and are not able to see that truth. I think the phrase "God Made My Day" is a vast improvement over Dirty Harry's statement "Go ahead, make my day," which would simply give him the satisfaction of blotting out another life and feeling that maybe he had contributed in a small way to justice in the world by that act. Whereas when we say the phrase "God Made My Day" what we are really voicing is a statement of faith about whom is behind it all, about whom is behind it all, about who gives us the strength, the grace sufficient to meet each day, and about who made life so that when we reach out to others we begin to find what God intends us to have all along, fullness of life. This is the day that the Lord has made; let us rejoice and be glad!

CSS Publishing Company, Inc, Bumper Sticker Religion, by Carl B. Rife